Am I the only one who noticed the unnerving, pathological element to the fatherless Cartman having a touching Hollywood moment with his egyptian dream dad? It was really quite sad when they told each other that they loved each other, and then starting singing. One of those rare glimpses into the vulnerable, repressed parts of Eric Cartman.

He also used the same high-pitched "D-aaad" kind of voice he uses with Lianne when he wants to manipulate her Even in fantasy Egypt, Cartman is spoiled and pushing his parent for whatever he wants. But yes it was also kind of touching.

Sun Jul 04, 2010 10:32 pm3281Somewhere south of the north pole, somewhere north of the south pole

UhhIDontKnow wrote:

Zazaban wrote:

Am I the only one who noticed the unnerving, pathological element to the fatherless Cartman having a touching Hollywood moment with his egyptian dream dad? It was really quite sad when they told each other that they loved each other, and then starting singing. One of those rare glimpses into the vulnerable, repressed parts of Eric Cartman.

He also used the same high-pitched "D-aaad" kind of voice he uses with Lianne when he wants to manipulate her Even in fantasy Egypt, Cartman is spoiled and pushing his parent for whatever he wants.

I'm too cynical of this show. I'm sure based on it's past continuity that Cartman isn't going to be jewish now, but they might actually remember stuff? Not that it makes a show better, shows that become bogged down in their own history aren't better than those who can be dipped into. I did like the way the show took the piss out of the fact it probably won't remember it with Cartman's "I am jewish now you know for seriously" line.

One last thing. For the good part of the week I could not figure out why Cartman was screaming "the bread's all flat!" for. It was funny considering how trivial that is comparing to the plagues that were happening around him, but really random.

Yesterday, it finally dawned upon me: Unleavened bread! Duh!Can't believe it took me this long to make the connection, considering that my church uses unleavened bread for communions.

Well, considering the recurring theme of "lying or stupid" throughout this episode, I was expecting Kyle to respond to Cartman's claim that he's not lying by saying, "I know. You're stupid." I'm surprised he didn't.

That was the joke. Kyle responded with "I know," which implies that Cartman can only be the only other alternative: stupid.